Duckworth v. Stalnaker

69 S.E. 850, 68 W. Va. 197, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 108
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 850 (Duckworth v. Stalnaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duckworth v. Stalnaker, 69 S.E. 850, 68 W. Va. 197, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 108 (W. Va. 1910).

Opinion

Williams, Judge :

Martha J. Duckworth brought an action in the circuit court of Barbour county, under the civil damage act, against Floyd Stalnaker, a licensed saloon-keeper, to recover damages for injury to her means of support alleged to be in consequence of unlawful sales of intoxicating liquors to her husband, and obtained a judgment for $1,500.00. Defendant was awarded a writ of error.

Counsel for defendant in error insists that the bills of exceptions. are not sufficiently identified to constitute them parts of the record. They are eleven in number, and are all signed by the trial judge. Number eleven does not have the judge’s official designation after his signature. But this omission is not material. The name subscribed to this bill of exceptions is the same as the name signed to the others, and we must assume that the same person signed all of them, and that the judge signed No. 11 in his official capacity. While it is the usual practice for the trial judge to sign bills pf exceptions, and to give his official designation, still we know of no rule of law which makes such manner of signing essential to their .validity. Seeing that the name signed to No. 11 is the same as the name of the trial judge, we take judicial notice that this bill of exceptions was signed by the judge who tried the case, [201]*201and that he signed it in his official capacity. The law makes it the judge’s duty to sign bills of exceptions, and when his name appears signed thereto, it is not to be presumed that he signed otherwise than as judge. But in addition to the judge’s signing hills of exceptions, it is also essential that they be made parts of the record by an order entered on the records. 5 Ency. Dig. 394, and cases cited.

The bills of exceptions, in the present case, were made up in vacation within thirty days after the adjournment of the term at which the trial was had, and a vacation order was made by the judge and certified to the clerk 'who recorded the same. But, it is claimed, the vacation order made by the judge does not sufficiently identify the hills of exceptions. The order refers to them, and makes them parts of the record, by numbers only, as 1, 2, 3, etc. This we think, is sufficient to make it reasonably certain that the exceptions so designated in- the order, are the same that were signed by the judge.

Two things are essential to constitute a bill of exceptions a part of the record; (1) the signing of it by the judge; (2) an order of the court or of the judge in vacation made within thirty days and entered on the records of the trial court, incorporating it into the record. Both of these essentials have been complied with in this case, and the bills of exceptions must be regarded as a part of the record of the case.

Plaintiff in error insists that the court improperly overruled his demurrer to the declaration. One ground of demurer is, ' that the declaration seeks to recover for the injury to plaintiff’s means of support, and also for the personal injury sustained by the husband. Another ground is, that the declaration does not sufficiently state a cause of action for damages for injury to plaintiff on account of an unlawful sale of intoxicating liquors to her husband.

There are two counts in the declaration. The substance of the first is, that defendant, a licensed saloon-keeper, sold and gave to plaintiff’s husband intoxicating liquors, and permitted him to drink the same upon defendant’s premises, until he (plaintiff’s husband) became grossly intoxicated, and, after he became intoxicated, defendant pushed him out of his saloon and, in doing so, broke his leg, in consequence whereof he was unable, for a long time, to furnish plaintiff the means of sup[202]*202port which he had furnished her prior to his injury; that in consequence plaintiff was uncared for by her husband and suffered hardship, privation and mental anguish and worry.

The second count differs from the first in that it alleges the unlawful act to consist in the defendant’s selling and giving intoxicating liquors to plaintiff’s husband, knowing and having reason to believe that he was a person who was in the habit of drinking to intoxication. It also avers that her husband fell and broke his leg in consequence of his intoxication produced by defendant’s unlawful sales, and that he neglected his work, and squandered his money, and that in consequence thereof plaintiff was inj'ured in her means of support. Each of these counts contains sufficient averment to constitute a good cause of action, and the demurrer was properly overruled. The averment of personal injury to the husband is not made for the purpose of recovering damages therefor, and notwithstanding plaintiff’s cause of action would have been sufficiently pleaded ■without this averment, still, as it was a matter which could be properly proven in order to show in what respect, and to what extent, the wife was. affected in her means of support, the husband’s ability to labor being one of her means, it could certainly do no harm to allege it in the declaration. This averment may be treated as surplusage; it does not affect the merits of the declaration.

It is assigned as error that the court improperly permitted certain questions to be asked, and to be answered by certain witnesses for plaintiff. These questions were asked for the purpose of ascertaining in what manner, and how badly plaintiff’s husband was injured, and what was his condition, as to being drunk or sober, at the time the injury occurred. These questions were proper for the reason above stated. Plaintiff is not suing for the personal injury to her husband, but only for injury to her own means of support. If the husband furnishes support to the wife, and is disabled and rendered less competent in consequence of unlawful sales of intoxicating drink to him, it follows that what causes his disability is an injury to the wife’s means of support. In any case where the wife derives her support from the physical labor and business management of her husband, it necessarily follows that whatever disables him physically, or incapacitates him for business, is [203]*203a direct injury to her means of support. Because, in such case, the husband’s ability is the wife’s means of support.

Counsel for defendant insists that the injury to plaintiff’s husband resulted from the unlawful sale made by defendant’s clerk, or barkeeper, without his knowledge or consent, and that* therefore, defendant is not liable. The unlawful sale is the ground of the action; the principal is liable if it is made by his agent, or clerk. Pennington v.. Gillaspie, 66 W. Va. 643; State v. Nichols, 67 W. Va. 659; and State v. Davis, 68 W. Va. The statute does not require that the unlawful sale shall be the proximate cause of-injury to the person, property, or means of support of a person in .order that such person can have a right of action. It requires, only, that the injury be done “by any intoxicated person, or in consequence of the intoxication, habitual or otherwise, of any person.” The injury, if any, in such cases nearly always results indirectly and consequentially from the unlawful sales and not directly and proximately. By section 26, chapter 32, Code 1906, known as the Civil Damage Act, the Legislature has changed the common law rule of proximate cause which still obtains in other actions of tort. Dor reasons of public policy the legislature has, by this act, created a right of action which did not exist at the common law. Volans v. Owens, 74 N. Y. 528; Homire v. Halfmen, 156 Ind. 470.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 850, 68 W. Va. 197, 1910 W. Va. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duckworth-v-stalnaker-wva-1910.